Investing in Pay Per Click Marketing or Search Engine Optimization - a Company Decision |  | Visited: 2282 |
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| | by Scott Buresh February 22, 2007 |
| Scott Buresh |
Scott Buresh is the
founder and CEO of Medium Blue, which was recently named the number one search engine optimization company in the
world by PromotionWorld. Scott’s
articles have appeared in numerous publications, including PromotionWorld, WebProNews, MarketingProfs,
DarwinMag, SiteProNews, SEO Today,
ISEDB.com, and Search Engine Guide. He was also a
contributor to Building Your Business with
Google For Dummies (Wiley, 2004). Medium Blue is an Atlanta search engine
optimization company with local and national clients, including Boston
Scientific, Cirronet, and DS Waters. Download Medium Blue's
latest exclusive whitepaper, "Adding Search to Your Marketing
Mix," for more insight. |
| Scott Buresh
has written 50 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Scott Buresh... |
As click costs rise, many companies who
are already investing in active pay per click marketing campaigns are
looking toward hiring a search engine optimization company to
supplement their marketing portfolio in order to increase their
exposure and reduce their advertising spend. In some cases,
frustrated by click fraud and increasing click costs, marketers are
using search engine optimization to completely replace pay per click
marketing. However, these companies will often try to evaluate search
engine optimization using the same methodology that they had used for
pay per click - by figuring out the cost per click.
In almost every case, a campaign
created by a reputable search engine optimization company will
eventually garner lower per-click costs than pay per click marketing
for any industry. Yet using cost per click to compare the
effectiveness of these two separate disciplines is comparing apples
to, well, anything other than apples. The crucial difference between
these two approaches is that pay per click marketing is more of an
advertising investment, while search engine optimization is more
appropriately likened to an investment in infrastructure. While both
have their merits in terms of increasing a company’s online
exposure, it is important to understand the differences in the
respective investments and to determine why cost per click is not a
fair indicator of the performance of a search engine optimization
company.
Pay Per Click Marketing
Advertising investments of all kinds,
from billboards to print ads to television spots to pay per click
marketing, all share a common trait. They exist in the public eye for
as long as a company is willing to pay for them. Stop paying, and
they disappear. True, a print ad may continue to exist for a while
after it runs (until the newspaper or magazine gets recycled, at
least), and a television spot may get attention if it wins any awards
(or winds up on YouTube). But a pay per click marketing campaign will
simply vanish as soon as the budget is cut. This means that when a
company reduces its advertising spend in this arena, it loses all of
its exposure immediately.
What does this really mean? Well, for
one, it means that figuring out the average per-click costs of a pay
per click marketing campaign makes sense because everything happens
in real time. A pay per click campaign will begin nearly instantly
after a company signs up and pays, and it will vanish just as quickly
when the company ceases payment. In other words, there is a clear
delineation of when a campaign begins and when it ends.
This delineation is important, because
it excludes many other potential factors that muddy the waters when
you try to apply this same ROI analysis to a campaign created by a
search engine optimization company.
Search Engine Optimization
As said previously, utilizing a search
engine optimization company can be likened to making an investment in
the infrastructure of a business rather than an investment in
advertising. This is because with search engine optimization, there
is no clear delineation of where the benefit from the campaign ends.
If a business stops paying its search engine optimization company at
any point after the campaign has been launched (presuming they have
hired a decent search engine optimization company), there will
continue to be results from that campaign for an extended period of
time- usually many months or even years.
Of course, it is not recommended that
any business actually quit an ongoing SEO campaign because a good
search engine optimization company will always be expanding and
honing that campaign over time to make it more successful over the
long term. However, budgets get revisited and revised. Decision
makers can change. And if the budget for SEO does get cut, a
business will continue to see results for long after. How, then, can
you determine value on a per-click basis? The simple answer is that
you can’t.
It should be noted that while
maintaining ongoing results after payments have ceased is a big
upside to search engine optimization, the inverse downside is that an
effective campaign put in place by a search engine optimization
company can take some time to implement, and the results may not
appear for weeks or months. A search engine optimization campaign
takes patience, effort, and, most of all, time. If a business needs
its marketing campaign to be up and running immediately, pay per
click marketing is going to be a better short-term choice.
Conclusion
It is important to recognize the innate
differences in pay per click campaigns and search engine optimization
when trying to quantify results. A pay per click marketing campaign
can have a definitive beginning and end, which makes cost per click a
good way of determining ROI. Yet the results gained from the hiring
of a search engine optimization company, although an SEO campaign can
take much longer to implement, will outlast the results from a pay
per click campaign if a business ever needs to cut spending. And
this is where the notion of analyzing the effectiveness of a search
engine optimization campaign on a cost per click basis breaks down.
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